| Literature DB >> 26311568 |
Andras Heijink1,2, Marc L Wagener3, Maarten J de Vos4, Denise Eygendaal5.
Abstract
Treatment of comminuted distal humeral fractures remains challenging. Open reduction-internal fixation remains the preferred treatment, but is not always feasible. In selected cases with non-reconstructable or highly comminuted fractures, total elbow arthroplasty has been used, however, also with relatively high complication and failure rates. Distal humerus prosthetic hemiarthroplasty (DHA) may be an alternative in these cases. The purpose of this study was to report the midterm results of six patients that were treated by DHA for acute and salvage treatment of non-reconstructable fractures of the distal humerus. All six patients were treated by DHA for acute and salvage treatment of non-reconstructable fractures of the distal humerus. Medical records were reviewed, and each patient was seen in the office. Mean follow-up was 54 months (range 21-76 months). Implant survival was 100 %. Three were pain free and three had mild or moderate residual pain. Average flexion-extension arc was 95.8° (range 70°-115°) and average pronation-supination arc was 165° (range 150°-180°). In three, there was some degree of instability, which was symptomatic in one. One had motoric and sensory sequelae of a partially recovered traumatic ulnar nerve lesion. According to the Mayo Elbow Performance Score, there were three excellent, one good and two poor results. Four were satisfied with the final result, and two were not. In this case series of six patients with DHA for non-reconstructable distal humerus fractures, favorable midterm follow-up results were seen; however, complications were also observed.Entities:
Keywords: Arthroplasty; Elbow; Posttraumatic; Replacement; Trauma; Upper extremity
Year: 2015 PMID: 26311568 PMCID: PMC4570889 DOI: 10.1007/s11751-015-0229-z
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Strategies Trauma Limb Reconstr ISSN: 1828-8928
Summary of recent literature
| References | Study design |
| Average follow-up | Prosthesis type | Data | Implant failure (%) | Average postoperative flexion–extension arc (°) | MEPS | Degeneration proximal ulna leading to (planned) conversion |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Parsons et al. [ | Case series | 8 (4 acute, 4 salvage) | Not provided, short-term | Sorbie-Questor | Pooled | 100 | Not provided | Not provided | 1 |
| Burkhart et al. [ | Case series | 10 (8 acute, 2 salvage) | 12.1 (6–23) months | Latitude | Individualized | 100 | 107 (range 75–135) | 8 excellent, 1 good, 1 fair | 1 |
| Adolfsson et al. [ | Case series | 8 (all acute) | 4.1 (range 2.5–6) years | Kudo | Individualized | 100 | 96.3 (range 60–120) | 5 excellent, 3 good | None |
| Argintar et al. [ | Case series | 10 (9 acute, 1 salvage) | 12 months (range not provided) | Latitude | Individualized | 100 | 102 (range 110–140) | 3 excellent, 2 good, 3 fair, 1 poor, 1 n/a | None |
| Smith et al. [ | Case series | 17 (15 acute, 2 salvage)a | 80 (range 25–133) months | 5 Sorbie-Questor, 12 Latitude | Individualized | 15 %b | 116 (range 70–133) | 4 excellent, 4 good, 1 fair, 1 poor | None |
| Hohman et al. [ | Case series | 7 (5 acute, 2 salvage)c | 36 months (range not provided) | Latitude | Individualized | 100 | 96 (range 70–130) | 1 excellent, 3 good, 2 fair, 1 poor | None |
aFour revised prostheses were not included in the review, and four patients had died. One was lost to follow-up for reasons not discussed
bImplant failure was calculated based on four failures/revisions of a total of 26 placed prostheses, assuming the nine prosthesis that were lost to follow-up have not failed
cOne patient was lost to follow-up
Fig. 1Humeral component with anatomical spool (i.e., distal humerus prosthesis) of the Lattitude® Total Elbow
Demographic data for the individual patients
| Case | Sex | Injured side | Dominant side | Age at surgery | AO classification initial fracture | Indication | Surgical procedures prior to distal humerus hemiarthroplasty | Time from initial fracture treatment (months) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Female | Right | Right | 62 | 13 type b2 | Nonunion capitellum w/secondary avascular necrosis | ORIF | 29 |
| 2 | Female | Right | Right | 55 | 13 type c3 | Severe avascular necrosis capitellum | ORIF | 10 |
| 3 | Female | Right | Right | 77 | 13 type b3 | Nonunion capitellum w/secondary avascular necrosis | ORIF | 1 |
| 4 | Female | Left | Right | 65 | 13 type b3 | Nonunion capitellum w/secondary avascular necrosis | ORIF | 4 |
| 5 | Female | Right | Right | 76 | 13 type c3 | Acute non-reconstructable distal humerus fracture | None | 0 |
| 6 | Female | Left | Right | 68 | 13 type b3 | Nonunion capitellum w/secondary avascular necrosis capitellum | ORIF | 7 |
ORIF open reduction–internal fixation
Clinical outcome data for the individual patients
| Case | F/U (mos) | Paina | Instabilityb | Flexion–extension (arc) (zero method, °) | Pronation–supination (arc) (zero method, °) | Mayo Elbow Performance Scorec | Neurovascular or infectious complications | Additional comments | Patient satisfaction |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | 76 | Mild | Grade 1 valgus | 110–40–0 (70) | 75–0–75 (150) | 55/poor | Fully recovered lesion ulnar nerve not neurophysiologically investigated | None | Unsatisfied |
| 2 | 61 | Moderate | Grade 3 valgus | 115–30–0 (85) | 90–0–80 (170) | 40/poor | Partially recovered EMG-proven axonotmesis ulnar nerve | Persistent subluxation | Unsatisfied |
| 3 | 57 | Mild | Grade 2 valgus | 130–30–0 (100) | 90–0–90 (180) | 80/good | None | None | Satisfied |
| 4 | 66 | None | None | 135–20–0 (115) | 80–0–80 (160) | 100/excellent | None | None | Satisfied |
| 5d | 21 | None | None | 115–20–0 (95) | 80–0–70 (150) | 95/excellent | None | None | Satisfied |
| 6 | 43 | None | None | 130–20–0 (110) | 90–0–90 (180) | 100/excellent | None | None | Satisfied |
aPain is graded as none, mild, moderate or severe
bInstability is graded as none (i.e., stable), mild, moderate or gross
cThe Mayo Elbow Performance Score total score is graded as excellent (95–100), good (80–94), fair (60–79) and poor (<59). All revisions are considered a poor result, regardless of total score
dPatient deceased due to old age. Documentation from last office visit was used
Patient-derived outcome scores
| Case | DASH | Oxford Elbow Score | SF-36 | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Pain domain | Elbow function | Socio-psychological | Physical component summary | Mental component summary | ||
| 1 | 20 | 100 | 68.8 | 50 | 43.6 | 49.1 |
| 2 | 57.5 | 43.8 | 25 | 31.3 | 37.5 | 51.5 |
| 3 | 7.4 | 100 | 100 | 87.5 | 47.8 | 56.4 |
| 4 | 5.0 | 87.5 | 87.5 | 93.8 | 54.3 | 39.4 |
| 5 | n/a | n/a | n/a | n/a | n/a | n/a |
| 6 | 2.5 | 87.5 | 100 | 87.5 | 53.9 | 59.5 |
Fig. 2a–d Antero-posterior and lateral radiographic images of the elbow before (a, b) and at end follow-up (c, d) 43 months after distal humerus prosthetic hemiarthroplasty (humeral component of Latitude® Total Elbow with anatomical spool) at end follow-up of case 6. The prosthesis is well positioned, without signs of loosening
Fig. 3a–d Antero-posterior and lateral radiographic image of the elbow before (a, b) and at end follow-up (c, d) 61 months after distal humerus prosthetic hemiarthroplasty (humeral component of Latitude® Total Elbow with anatomical spool) of case 2. Subluxations of the ulnohumeral joint and discrete irregularity of the articulating surface of the proximal ulna are noted